Juvelyn Taniega walks down a desolate road and points toward the barren landscape where her home once stood.

When Typhoon Haiyan tore through Tacloban, she says, the house she lived in with her husband and six children was one of the first to fall down. They huddled inside a bus, seeking shelter from the storm surge.

She survived, but they were swept away in the rushing waters. Now, Taniega is searching for their remains.

"I really want to see them," she told AC360, "even if it's just their bodies."

Taniega found the bodies of her husband and three of her children. But she's still searching for three other children. She doesn't believe they survived the storm.

And she doesn't know where she'll sleep.

"Here, in the street," she said. "Anywhere. I don't know where I go."

In Tacloban, one of many cities dealing with death and destruction that Typhoon Haiyan left behind, survivors say there's nowhere left to go.

Haunted by the sounds of the storm

Days after the deadly typhoon struck, the sounds Jenelyn Manocsoc heard during the storm still haunt her.

Amid the swirling, tugging waters, Manocsoc placed her 11-month-old son, Anthony, on her head. She hung on to the roof rafters to avoid being swept away.

They survived, but her husband and other relatives were killed in the storm. She doesn't know where she will go next, but at least she and her son are alive.

"It's very traumatic," she said, cradling Anthony in her arms. "It's very hard."

Looking for food

Authorities have said that supplies are on the way to some of the hardest-hit areas. But desperate residents told CNN affiliate ABS-CBN that time was running out.

"Our house got demolished," one woman told ABS-CBN. "My father died after being hit by falling wooden debris. We are calling for your help. If possible, please bring us food. We don't have anything to eat."

In the city of Palo on Leyte's eastern coast, another woman said she was struggling to feed her family, including a newborn.

"We took leftover rice from what was cooked, but even a dog probably wouldn't eat it because it was spoiled," she said. "We ate it anyway."

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In a family resort in the hardest hit part of Tacloban, the storm surge smashed six-inch concrete walls like tissue paper.

As the waters rose there, Tacloban Mayor Alfred Romualdez and others who were huddled inside the ballroom climbed into the ceiling, praying for survival.

Now residents of the city call him "The Ghost," because they thought he died in the storm.

"The waves just came so fast," Romualdez said. "But worse than that was the wind. The wind was just so strong that the visibility was about 10-15 feet. There's no way that you could even look, because it was so strong that it practically pulled out your eyes."

Now, he's left surveying the damage to his decimated city. He says if authorities had given a different sort of warning before the storm, comparing it to a tsunami instead of merely calling it a typhoon, more people may have survived.

"We've done drills on tsunami. And when we do (tsunami) drills, almost 80% of them really get out," he said. "Storm surge, they don't understand."